HHS Releases Updated HIPAA Security Risk Assessment Tool
The HHS has updated its HIPAA Security Risk Assessment Tool and has added several new user-requested features to improve usability. The HIPAA Security Risk Assessment Tool was developed by the HHS Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) in collaboration with the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights to help healthcare organizations with this important provision of the HIPAA Security Rule. The risk assessment is a foundational element of compliance with the Health Insurance Portability Act Security Rule. By conducting a risk assessment, healthcare organizations can identify areas where PHI may be at risk. Any risks can then be assessed, prioritized, and reduced to a reasonable and acceptable level. The failure to conduct a comprehensive, organization-wide risk assessment is the most commonly cited HIPAA violation in OCR enforcement actions. This is perfectly understandable. If a risk assessment does not cover all systems that store or touch ePHI, vulnerabilities are likely to be missed and the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of ePHI will remain...
Prisma Health Website Breach Potentially Impacts 22,000 Individuals
Prisma Health Midlands is notifying approximately 19,000 patients and 3,000 employees about a data breach involving the Palmetto Health website. Prisma Health – formerly Palmetto Health – learned on August 29, 2019 that an unauthorized individual had obtained the login credentials of a Prisma Health employee. Those credentials allowed the attacker to access the Palmetto Health website, which contained volunteer registration information and patient pre-registration forms that had been completed online. Those forms related to 6 Midlands hospitals and contained information such as names, addresses, dates of birth, limited health information and, for certain individuals, their Social Security number. No medical records or financial information were exposed. Prisma Health was not able to determine for how long the credentials were accessible. Upon discovery of the incident, the employee’s password was changed to prevent any further unauthorized access and policies and procedures are being updated to prevent similar breaches in the future. Affected individuals have been notified by mail...
Quest Diagnostics $195,000 Class Action Settlement Approved by Federal Judge
Following a November 2016 cyberattack at Quest Diagnostics that resulted in an unauthorized individual accessing and stealing the personal information and medical test results of 34,000 individuals, a class action lawsuit was filed by the breach victims. Quest Diagnostics proposed a $195,000 settlement to resolve the case. The settlement has recently been approved by a New Jersey district court judge. The types of information obtained by the hacker included names, phone numbers, dates of birth, and the results of medical tests, including HIV test results. The lawsuit alleged Quest Diagnostics had violated New Jersey laws and had been negligent for failing to safeguard the sensitive health information of its clients, Quest Diagnostics had breached its contract with clients, and that the company failed to provide timely notifications to patients informing them about the hacking incident and theft of their data. Quest Diagnostics maintains the claims are meritless, but the decision was taken to settle the lawsuit to avoid ongoing litigation and further legal costs. Under the terms of...
Improper Disposal Incident at Smith’s Food & Drug Affects Almost 58,000 Patients
Salt Lake City, OH-based Smith’s Food & Drug has announced that the pharmacy records of around 58,000 patients have been disposed of in an improper manner. The improper disposal incident was discovered by the grocery and drug store chain on August 29, 2019, and affected customers of its store at 4600 East Sunset Road in Henderson, NV. 12 boxes of files containing physical pharmacy records, including prescriptions, were disposed of by a former associate in an improper manner. The records were not shredded, pulped, burned, or pulverized to render them unreadable, or indecipherable, and to ensure they could not otherwise be reconstructed, as is required by HIPAA. The boxes of files were put in the store’s trash compactor along with regular trash. Since the records are no longer accessible, it was not possible to determine which patients were impacted and the exact types of information that had been exposed. Smith’s Food & Drug has estimated the sensitive information of approximately 57,600 patients was likely contained in the pharmacy records. The types of HIPAA-covered...
Report Suggests Augmented Security Following a Data Breach Contributes to Increase in Patient Mortality Rate
Healthcare data breaches lead to a reduction in the quality of care provided to patients, according to a study recently published in Health Services Research. Researchers analyzed data from Medicare Compare which details quality measures at hospitals. Data from 2012-2016 was analyzed and compared with data from the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights on data breaches of more than 500 records over the same period. The researchers analyzed data on 3,025 Medicare-certified hospitals, 311 of which had experienced a data breach. According to the study, the time it took from a patient arriving at the hospital to an electrocardiogram being performed increased by up to 2.7 minutes at hospitals that had experienced a data breach. A ransomware attack that prevents clinicians from accessing patient data will limit their ability to provide essential medical services to patients, so a delay in conducting tests and obtaining the results is to be expected. However, the delays were found to continue for months and years after an cyberattack was experienced. The study showed that 3-4 years after a breach...



